archerforkids
Gold $$ Contributor
Yes, very common. I bet if you did a general web search you'd find all sorts of people asking this very question. I'm sure I've seen the same question before on this forum. I've had it on my own brass. I suspect it's hardness thing where the case mouth springs back. I never worried about it and just went on with my day. I'd bet if you annealed a case neck and re-sized it wouldn't do it.Anybody had this happen before? Small "flare"/lip around case mouth after resizing.
Think you answered your own question. Those few were slightly over length and your trimmed them back into spec measurements.Strange occurrence. Same die I have used for years for my hunting rifle. Out of 50 cases I had to trim 8 back a little. I'll be scoping the inside of that die before it gets used again.
Thanks for the feedback guys
Agree. That and annealing. I first ran into it making 20 practical brass I think.This was discussed here a long time ago using Redding bushing dies. Reddings answer was that if you are sizing down the neck diameter by more than .005 ( I think) in one stroke, it will give you the belled neck. Sizing down about .004 the first time then sizing down a second time to .006 or more, you won't get the belling. I believe the poster was Cat Shooter.
Why do you say that? As long as you don't use excessive pressure or time, they come out perfect. It takes maybe a second or 2 with light pressure and it's done. I would give up shooting if I had to do thousands of cases a year by hand. The cutters that come on the machines from the factory are junk. Replace them with carbide and the rolled lip goes away.I would not recommend power deburring or chamfering. You will thin out the neck at the top and it creates a knife edge.